Subtype-discordant pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma tumors show intermediate clinical and molecular characteristics

JT Topham, JM Karasinska, MKC Lee, V Csizmok… - Clinical Cancer …, 2021 - AACR
JT Topham, JM Karasinska, MKC Lee, V Csizmok, LM Williamson, GH Jang, RE Denroche
Clinical Cancer Research, 2021AACR
Purpose: RNA-sequencing–based subtyping of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC)
has been reported by multiple research groups, each using different methodologies and
patient cohorts.“Classical” and “basal-like” PDAC subtypes are associated with survival
differences, with basal-like tumors associated with worse prognosis. We amalgamated
various PDAC subtyping tools to evaluate the potential of such tools to be reliable in clinical
practice. Experimental Design: Sequencing data for 574 PDAC tumors was obtained from …
Purpose
RNA-sequencing–based subtyping of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) has been reported by multiple research groups, each using different methodologies and patient cohorts. “Classical” and “basal-like” PDAC subtypes are associated with survival differences, with basal-like tumors associated with worse prognosis. We amalgamated various PDAC subtyping tools to evaluate the potential of such tools to be reliable in clinical practice.
Experimental Design
Sequencing data for 574 PDAC tumors was obtained from prospective trials and retrospective public databases. Six published PDAC subtyping strategies (Moffitt regression tools, clustering-based Moffitt, Collisson, Bailey, and Karasinska subtypes) were used on each sample, and results were tested for subtype call consistency and association with survival.
Results
Basal-like and classical subtype calls were concordant in 88% of patient samples, and survival outcomes were significantly different (P < 0.05) between prognostic subtypes. Twelve percent of tumors had subtype-discordant calls across the different methods, showing intermediate survival in univariate and multivariate survival analyses. Transcriptional profiles compatible with that of a hybrid subtype signature were observed for subtype-discordant tumors, in which classical and basal-like genes were concomitantly expressed. Subtype-discordant tumors showed intermediate molecular characteristics, including subtyping gene expression (P < 0.0001) and mutant KRAS allelic imbalance (P < 0.001).
Conclusions
Nearly 1 in 6 patients with PDAC have tumors that fail to reliably fall into the classical or basal-like PDAC subtype categories, based on two regression tools aimed toward clinical practice. Rather, these patient tumors show intermediate prognostic and molecular traits. We propose close consideration of the non-binary nature of PDAC subtypes for future incorporation of subtyping into clinical practice.
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